Thriving after hurricanes hit

Cover Story

Thriving after hurricanes hit

Two hurricanes a decade apart could have forced Frank and Abby Santos to close shop. Instead, they used the experiences from the storms to not only survive, but grow their business.

Brooke Bilyj

Even after two hurricanes struck, Frank and Abigail Santos decided to push forward to grow No Ka Oi, their landscaping business in Hawaii.

Photos courtesy of No Ka Oi

When a second hurricane hit Abigail Santos’ landscaping business, she was ready to close shop and move on to something else. She could go back to nursing, or work a 9-5 service job. Anything other than having to pick up the pieces again from a devastating natural disaster.

“I’ll just go and be a cashier in the grocery store,” she says of her immediate thoughts after the second hurricane. “I don’t care; I don’t want to do this anymore. It’s too hard.”

Her husband Frank, who was also her business partner, had other plans.

“Frank likes a challenge,” she says. “He had to give me a pep talk. Also, we had employees that depended on us.”

The pep talk was all she needed, and 25 years later, No Ka Oi, (which means “the best” in Hawaiian), is a thriving $5-million business with 70 employees.

“We had such a great team and so many good people that everyone rallied,” she says. “We were very lucky to have those guys and gals.”

Today, No Ka Oi employees teach each other so Santos can focus on overall business growth.

West or bust.

It was only because of a spontaneous decision that she ended up in Hawaii, or in the green industry at all. Santos grew up on the East Coast and attended the University of Maryland, where she studied secondary English education in a program that offered free tuition to students who taught in the state after graduation. During her senior year, they told her there were no teaching positions available, forcing her out of the program.

Her family had just moved to California, so she headed west seeking new opportunity. Some friends stopped by on their way to Hawaii, and Santos made a spur-of-the-moment decision to join them.

When she got to Kauai – which, in the early 1970s, was still undeveloped – she stayed, then met and married Frank Santos, a native Hawaiian.

Santos went back to school for nursing, while Frank managed a restaurant. After their daughter was born, Santos didn’t want to work long hours as a nurse. Instead, she found an opportunity at Frank’s restaurant.

“It was becoming a fad to have potted plants inside buildings,” Santos says. “We saw maids putting ice in the plants to water them, and I said, ‘Well, I can do that.’”

“I wanted to be the biggest plant rental company right away.” Abigail Santos, No Ka Oi

She gave the restaurant a proposal to take care of its interior plants – securing the first client for her small plant rental company that launched in 1977 as No Ka Oi Plants.

“As soon as I started taking care of those plants, I became obsessed,” says Santos, who read everything she could about horticulture. “I wanted to be the biggest plant rental company right away. I wanted more accounts, so I went around and harangued people until they hired me. I had one company tell me, ‘If I hire you, will you stop bothering me?’”

Once she got in the door for interior plants, clients started asking her to maintain landscapes. As customers built new properties, they asked for help with landscaping, so the couple earned their contractor’s licenses and added landscape installation and maintenance services.

Hurricanes hit.

No Ka Oi was growing when suddenly, in November 1982, Hurricane Iwa ripped past Kauai, setting records by inflicting hundreds of millions of dollars in damage. At that time, the company had about five employees and was mainly doing plant rental work.

“We lost all of our income,” she says. “We got on our feet pretty quickly because we were so small.”

While Santos doesn’t recall too many of the details from the 1982 hurricane, she says a few small customers survived, keeping No Ka Oi afloat while they slowly rebuilt the business. After the hurricane, development on the island accelerated through the ’80s, bringing more landscaping work.

Unfortunately, that meant the business and its customer base were bigger when Hurricane Iniki struck in September 1992. With winds exceeding 140 m.p.h., the Category 4 hurricane caused nearly $2 billion in damage to Kauai – the most destructive Hawaiian storm on record.

Planting coconut trees on a golf course

Most of the company’s work was on the south side of the island, and that was where the hurricane did the most damage. Santos says the company lost 90 percent of its income and the company’s nursery was destroyed on top of damage to the office and their house. At that point, the company’s business was split 50/50 between plant rental and landscaping.

“That was the worst one because there was more development on the island in ‘92,” Santos says, adding the company had about 20 employees at the time, and didn’t let anyone go during the recovery. “We had more employees, more accounts, and more at stake than we did in ‘82. That one was more devastating because we lost so much more. But even though it was devastating, it was a turning point for us.”

It was during that time that Santos realized that massive damage required massive clean-up, and shifted her focus from interior plants to landscaping. Santos applied for and received a small business loan to help keep the company running.

As customers along the shore recovered, Santos bolstered the business with clients further inland.

“If you’re on your toes, you can get a lot of work after a storm,” she says.

One example of Santos’ ambition was the pursuit of the Sheraton Hotel. Before the hurricane, the hotel only used No Ka Oi for plant rental. But the hotel was wiped out from the storm, taking a year to rebuild and reopening without a landscaping company to work on the grounds.

“As soon as they reopened, I started meeting with them,” she says. “And cellphones weren’t as big as today, so I had to go physically there and meet with people, really pounding the pavement.”

No Ka Oi only had one competitor, who was so big that they weren’t paying as much attention to the Sheraton as Santos.

Six months after the hurricane, No Ka Oi locked down the maintenance work for the Sheraton’s garden wing. Six months later, they got the rest of the facility. The Sheraton is still a customer today.

“That was a huge turning point, having a big resort like that hire us for maintenance,” Santos says. “That turned me into an entrepreneur. When I was doing plant rental, I was doing the work, and I enjoyed it, but after ’92, I started working on the business, not in it.”

The Sheraton gave her credibility with other resorts and high-end clients. Santos sold the plant rental business to focus on grounds maintenance, and Frank took charge of landscape installation as No Ka Oi Landscape Services grew.

Company headquarters after the 1982 hurricane; No Ka Oi now has 70 employees; the company offers a number of services, including erosion control.

Streamlined team management.

Today, No Ka Oi’s business is 80 percent commercial maintenance. As maintenance work increased, Santos focused on growing the business through delegation – for example, hiring a horticulturist with the maintenance experience to train her staff. Employees continue to teach each other so she can focus on growth.

No Ka Oi’s crews are composed of a leader and Gardeners 1, 2 and 3, so higher-level gardeners train newer employees. While Gardener 2 runs the trimmer or the mower, Gardener 1 observes while following behind with a blower. Then, Gardener 3 teaches Gardener 2 how to identify pests or spray weeds.

Weekly safety meetings take place online, making training easy. Santos used to print 60 copies of safety notes every week, then visit jobsites to collect employees’ signatures. Now, foremen use a smartphone app that provides safety topics and tracks attendance at weekly meetings.

“If you’re on your toes, you can get a lot of work after a storm.” Abigail Santos, No Ka Oi

“If there’s an accident, they add details and photos to the app,” Santos says.

The company’s Material Safety Data Sheets (MSDS) are also online, to Santos’ relief. “We had an MSDS book for every single site – sometimes two: one for the crew and one for management,” she explains. “As chemicals changed, you had to update the book, and it was impossible to keep up. Now it’s all online.”

Foremen also use apps to track their team’s hours, so payroll and billing are streamlined online.

And while it’s safe to say Santos doesn’t want another hurricane, the one in 1992 helped the company get where it is today.

“The hurricane opened up lots of opportunities for our company,” she says. “It was an impetus.”